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A journalist arrested over the alleged theft of a document that appeared in his film on a notorious Troubles massacre had branded the ongoing investigation a “complete farce”. Trevor Birney heavily criticised the police as he and fellow documentary maker Barry McCaffrey were bailed from custody after failing to get the probe halted. The award-winning reporters were arrested in...

A journalist arrested over the alleged theft of a document that appeared in his film on a notorious Troubles massacre had branded the ongoing investigation a “complete farce”. Trevor Birney heavily criticised the police as he and fellow documentary maker Barry McCaffrey were bailed from custody after failing to get the probe halted. The award-winning reporters were arrested in...

Police who arrested two film-makers who produced a documentary on the Loughinisland massacre must stop fishing and catch the killers, the National Union of Journalists has warned. Seamus Dooley, secretary of the Irish NUJ, called for the investigation into Trevor Birney and Barry McCaffrey to be dropped as the men returned to police custody in Belfast. The award-winning...

Police who arrested two film-makers who produced a documentary on the Loughinisland massacre must stop fishing and catch the killers, the National Union of Journalists has warned. Seamus Dooley, secretary of the Irish NUJ, called for the investigation into Trevor Birney and Barry McCaffrey to be dropped as the men returned to police custody in Belfast. The award-winning...

This is a story about journalists and a threat to press freedom. It is also a story about journalistic courage and, perversely, one about journalistic failure. Before we get there, however, it is necessary to provide a giant slab of context. We are in Northern Ireland, where farce and tragedy have so often been intertwined, and this latest manifestation centres on the aftermath...

No Stone Unturned | British Deep State Collusion | Full Documentary
An in-depth look at the unsolved 1994 Loughinisland massacre, where six Irishmen were murdered, presumably by a Unionist paramilitary group, while watching the World Cup at the local pub in Loughinisland, Northern Ireland.
Alex Gibney reopens the mysterious unsolved case revolving the 1994 Loughinisland massacre. On 18 June, in the small village of Loughinisland, Northern Ireland, six men were brutally murdered and a few others were wounded in a pub while watching the World Cup soccer match. Despite a long investigation by the police and many confusing leads, no perpetrators of the attack were ever found.
A police ombudsman\'s ruling that there was collusion in the 1994 murder of six Catholic men is \"unsustainable in law\", a judge has said.
Prolific documentarian Alex Gibney turns his lens on to Northern Ireland, with a typically forensic examination of an unsolved mass murder. The six victims of the 1994 Loughinisland massacre were watching the World Cup in their local pub when a masked gunman burst in and sprayed bullets from a Czech-made automatic weapon. But despite the fact that, as Gibney’s research reveals, the police had a clear idea of suspects from the outset, and despite the fact that a getaway vehicle, a gun and a bag full of balaclavas was found, nobody was ever charged.
What’s more, much of the evidence was later mislaid or destroyed. Scrupulously even-handed, the film explores collusion between police and paramilitaries and the decidedly unstable foundations underpinning the peace proc...

No Stone Unturned | British Deep State Collusion | Full Documentary
An in-depth look at the unsolved 1994 Loughinisland massacre, where six Irishmen were murdered, presumably by a Unionist paramilitary group, while watching the World Cup at the local pub in Loughinisland, Northern Ireland.
Alex Gibney reopens the mysterious unsolved case revolving the 1994 Loughinisland massacre. On 18 June, in the small village of Loughinisland, Northern Ireland, six men were brutally murdered and a few others were wounded in a pub while watching the World Cup soccer match. Despite a long investigation by the police and many confusing leads, no perpetrators of the attack were ever found.
A police ombudsman\'s ruling that there was collusion in the 1994 murder of six Catholic men is \"unsustainable in law\", a judge has said.
Prolific documentarian Alex Gibney turns his lens on to Northern Ireland, with a typically forensic examination of an unsolved mass murder. The six victims of the 1994 Loughinisland massacre were watching the World Cup in their local pub when a masked gunman burst in and sprayed bullets from a Czech-made automatic weapon. But despite the fact that, as Gibney’s research reveals, the police had a clear idea of suspects from the outset, and despite the fact that a getaway vehicle, a gun and a bag full of balaclavas was found, nobody was ever charged.
What’s more, much of the evidence was later mislaid or destroyed. Scrupulously even-handed, the film explores collusion between police and paramilitaries and the decidedly unstable foundations underpinning the peace proc...

UVF - Loughinisland Massacre - 18 June 1994

published:17 Sep 2017

UVF - Loughinisland Massacre - 18 June 1994

UVF - Loughinisland Massacre - 18 June 1994

published:17 Sep 2017

views:1230

On the 18th of June while people were watching a world cup match between Ireland vs Italy. UVF terrorists burst into the pub and shot dead 6 civilians in the back. It was one of the worst shooting attacks on civilians during the war....

UVF - Loughinisland Massacre - 18 June 1994

published:17 Sep 2017

views:1230

On the 18th of June while people were watching a world cup match between Ireland vs Italy. UVF terrorists burst into the pub and shot dead 6 civilians in the back. It was one of the worst shooting attacks on civilians during the war....

Programme on Collusion by Daragh McIntyre and Bronach Walsh

published:29 May 2015

Programme on Collusion by Daragh McIntyre and Bronach Walsh

Programme on Collusion by Daragh McIntyre and Bronach Walsh

published:29 May 2015

views:47748

First screened on BBC on 28th May 2015 this Panorama programme details the extent and scope of the policy of collusion in many hundreds of murders during Ireland\'s conflict
Warning: Contains distressing scenes...

Programme on Collusion by Daragh McIntyre and Bronach Walsh

published:29 May 2015

views:47748

First screened on BBC on 28th May 2015 this Panorama programme details the extent and scope of the policy of collusion in many hundreds of murders during Ireland\'s conflict
Warning: Contains distressing scenes...

Arlene Foster on Ombudsman report on Loughinisland

published:09 Jun 2016

Arlene Foster on Ombudsman report on Loughinisland

Arlene Foster on Ombudsman report on Loughinisland

published:09 Jun 2016

views:1237

Copyright belongs to Clipstorm/ The Belfast Telegraph
By Kirsten Elder
Moments after the Police Ombudsman released his conclusion about the Loughinisland report, First Minister for Northern Ireland was asked about the findings.
First Minister of Northern Ireland, Arlene Foster said: \"I do want to look at how he reached his conclusions, therefore I can say no more at this time.\"
The Ombudsman confirms collusion between the police and loyalist killers who gunned down and killed six Catholics over twenty-years-ago....

Arlene Foster on Ombudsman report on Loughinisland

published:09 Jun 2016

views:1237

Copyright belongs to Clipstorm/ The Belfast Telegraph
By Kirsten Elder
Moments after the Police Ombudsman released his conclusion about the Loughinisland report, First Minister for Northern Ireland was asked about the findings.
First Minister of Northern Ireland, Arlene Foster said: \"I do want to look at how he reached his conclusions, therefore I can say no more at this time.\"
The Ombudsman confirms collusion between the police and loyalist killers who gunned down and killed six Catholics over twenty-years-ago....

BBC Newsline report on Loughinisland Massacre

Loughinisland Churches

published:01 Oct 2017

Loughinisland Churches

Loughinisland Churches

published:01 Oct 2017

views:470

Loughinisland was a natural island within a lake but is now connected by a causeway in County Down, Northern Ireland.
The Loughinisland parish derived its name from the island which is connected to the mainland by a causeway which contains the ruins of three ancient churches. The oldest church on the island is the one in the middle and it continued in use until the much larger north church (left) was built to replace it in the 15th century . For the next 300 years this rectangular gabled structure served the needs of the Catholics of the area. After the Reformation, Protestants used it also for their service every Sunday after Mass was over.
The earliest recorded reference is to a parish church on the site in 1306. The Middle Church is the oldest, probably from the 13th century. The large North Church was built in the 15th century, probably to replace the Middle Church, and continued in use until 1720. The smallest is the South (MacCartan\'s) Church, the elaborately carved west door of which has the date 1636 and initials PMC for Phelim MacCartan. This was probably the main burial ground of the MacCartans who had one of their chief seats near the lake.
The North Church was in use until about 1718. Local accounts say that at one time there was an amicable arrangement for the church to be used for both Protestant and Roman Catholic worship, but that a dispute rose one wet Sunday, when Roman Catholics were unwilling to leave the church due to the rain, and free the church up for the Protestants. This displeased the Forde family so much that they dismantled the old church and...

Loughinisland Churches

published:01 Oct 2017

views:470

Loughinisland was a natural island within a lake but is now connected by a causeway in County Down, Northern Ireland.
The Loughinisland parish derived its name from the island which is connected to the mainland by a causeway which contains the ruins of three ancient churches. The oldest church on the island is the one in the middle and it continued in use until the much larger north church (left) was built to replace it in the 15th century . For the next 300 years this rectangular gabled structure served the needs of the Catholics of the area. After the Reformation, Protestants used it also for their service every Sunday after Mass was over.
The earliest recorded reference is to a parish church on the site in 1306. The Middle Church is the oldest, probably from the 13th century. The large North Church was built in the 15th century, probably to replace the Middle Church, and continued in use until 1720. The smallest is the South (MacCartan\'s) Church, the elaborately carved west door of which has the date 1636 and initials PMC for Phelim MacCartan. This was probably the main burial ground of the MacCartans who had one of their chief seats near the lake.
The North Church was in use until about 1718. Local accounts say that at one time there was an amicable arrangement for the church to be used for both Protestant and Roman Catholic worship, but that a dispute rose one wet Sunday, when Roman Catholics were unwilling to leave the church due to the rain, and free the church up for the Protestants. This displeased the Forde family so much that they dismantled the old church and...

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994

published:16 Jun 2016

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994

published:16 Jun 2016

views:2507

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994
Also known as The World Cup Massacre
The Loughinisland massacre took place on 18 June 1994 in the small village of Loughinisland, County Down, Northern Ireland. Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a loyalist paramilitary group, burst into a pub with assault rifles and fired on the customers , killing six civilians and wounding five. The pub was targeted because it was frequented mainly by Catholics, and was crowded with people watching the Republic of Ireland team playing in the 1994 FIFA World Cup.
It is thus sometimes called the World Cup massacre.
The attack was claimed as retaliation for the killing of three UVF members by the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA).
See Website for full story...

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994

published:16 Jun 2016

views:2507

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994
Also known as The World Cup Massacre
The Loughinisland massacre took place on 18 June 1994 in the small village of Loughinisland, County Down, Northern Ireland. Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a loyalist paramilitary group, burst into a pub with assault rifles and fired on the customers , killing six civilians and wounding five. The pub was targeted because it was frequented mainly by Catholics, and was crowded with people watching the Republic of Ireland team playing in the 1994 FIFA World Cup.
It is thus sometimes called the World Cup massacre.
The attack was claimed as retaliation for the killing of three UVF members by the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA).
See Website for full story...

Loughinisland v Clonduff (Down Chasmpionship Semi-Final 2009)

No Stone Unturned | British Deep State Collusion | Full Documentary
An in-depth look at the unsolved 1994 Loughinisland massacre, where six Irishmen were murdered, presumably by a Unionist paramilitary group, while watching the World Cup at the local pub in Loughinisland, Northern Ireland.
Alex G

On the 18th of June while people were watching a world cup match between Ireland vs Italy. UVF terrorists burst into the pub and shot dead 6 civilians in the back. It was one of the worst shooting attacks on civilians during the war.

First screened on BBC on 28th May 2015 this Panorama programme details the extent and scope of the policy of collusion in many hundreds of murders during Ireland\'s conflict
Warning: Contains distressing scenes

Copyright belongs to Clipstorm/ The Belfast Telegraph
By Kirsten Elder
Moments after the Police Ombudsman released his conclusion about the Loughinisland report, First Minister for Northern Ireland was asked about the findings.
First Minister of Northern Ireland, Arlene Foster said: \"I do want

Loughinisland was a natural island within a lake but is now connected by a causeway in County Down, Northern Ireland.
The Loughinisland parish derived its name from the island which is connected to the mainland by a causeway which contains the ruins of three ancient churches. The oldest church on t

Loughinisland Massacre 18th June 1994
Also known as The World Cup Massacre
The Loughinisland massacre took place on 18 June 1994 in the small village of Loughinisland, County Down, Northern Ireland. Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a loyalist paramilitary group, burst into a pub with a